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Baitul Mukarram National Mosque [5] Binat Bibi Mosque [6] Sunnati Jame Mosque; Chawk Mosque [7] Kakrail Mosque [8] Khan Mohammad Mridha Mosque; Sat Gambuj Mosque [9] Churihatta Mosque [10] Star Mosque [11] Kartalab Khan Mosque [12] Musa Khan Mosque [13] Lalbagh Shahi Mosque [14] Shaista Khan Mosque [15]
Dhaka is also called City of Mosques (মসজিদের শহর). Mosques. Baitul Mukarram; Kakrail Mosque; Lalbagh Fort Mosque; Khan Mohammad Mridha Mosque;
National mosque. It is the 10th largest mosque in the world, accommodating more than 40,000 people Sunnati Jame Mosque: Muhammadia Jamia Shareef Madrasa, 5 Outer Circular Rd, Dhaka: Sunni: Kakrail Mosque: Ramna Thana, Dhaka: 1952s Sunni: The centre of the country's Tablighi Jamaat: Army Central Mosque Dhaka: Sunni: Central mosque for the ...
In that meeting he proposed to Major General Khan, then military administrator of East Pakistan, that a grand mosque be built in Dhaka. Umrao Khan agreed to help build such a mosque. The same year, a Baitul Mukarram mosque committee was established and 8.30 acres of land between new Dhaka and Old Dhaka was chosen for the site. At that time ...
Pages in category "Mosques in Dhaka" The following 20 pages are in this category, out of 20 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Allakuri Mosque;
Musa Khan Mosque is a Mughal-era structure in Bangladesh that stands in the southern part of the country's capital Dhaka. [1] Built in 18th century the mosque holds significant historical values and is named after the son of medieval Bengal's one of the most prominent Baro-Bhuyans, Isa Khan's son Musa Khan.
The Sat Gambuj Mosque (Bengali: সাত গম্বুজ মসজিদ, lit. 'Seven Domed Mosque') is near the northwestern outskirts of Dhaka in the Mohammadpur area. [1] It is a fine example of the provincial Mughal style of architecture introduced in what is now Bangladesh in the 17th century.
Binat Bibi Mosque is the earliest surviving mosque in Dhaka built in 1454 [1] by Bakht Binat, the daughter of Marhamat. It was built during the rule of the Sultan of Bengal, Nasiruddin Mahmud Shah (1435–1459). The mosque is located beside the Hayat Bepari’s Bridge in Narinda area.